THE VERDICT
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Robert Gardner
The Arches has been around for a long time, since 1920 to be exact.
Oh, not in its present form, but a man named Johnny Villelle opened a
service station there in 1920. It was a pretty gutsy decision because the
amount of automobile traffic passing through that intersection on a daily
basis in 1920 left much to be desired.
The service station had three arches to advertise itself, thus the name
Arches began in 1920, even if the restaurant didn’t.
The service station prospered, so Johnny decided to put in a short-order
place with his sister, Ann Villelle, as manager. It too prospered so that
eventually Johnny built the present structure, some time during the early
‘20s.
Johnny had no experience in the restaurant field but had a natural gift
for the business, and the restaurant soon became the No. 1 eating place
in town. However, Johnny had a problem. Johnny Villelle was the most
fanatical bird hunter I have ever known. Any date in the calendar there
is some kind of a game bird available for a hunter. Thus, Johnny began to
turn the operation of his restaurant over to his bartender so he could
hunt.
However, even if Johnny was a lousy businessman -- insofar as being
around the restaurant -- he did know a set of books when he saw them. He
figured out that his bartender, to whom he turned over the operation of
the business when he was off bird hunting, was robbing him blind. What to
do?
Finally, Johnny came to a decision -- a somewhat weird decision. He made
his bartender his partner on the basis that as a partner he would never
steal from the partnership. Amazingly, it worked. Johnny hunted, the
bartender ran the business but split all the money coming in between
himself and Johnny, 50-50.
Finally, Johnny and the bartender made enough money so that they could
each retire, and they sold the business. Eventually, a man named Bob
Bachlor acquired the Arches. I don’t remember whether there were any
intervening owners. I only remember Bob Bachlor.
One day I came home from court and there on my breakfast bar reposed a
case of Jack Daniels whiskey. I asked my wife where it came from. She
said a man named Bachlor left it there.
I did not know Bob Bachlor personally, but I did know that that day I
had handled his divorce, and he had won. I put the case of Jack Daniels
in my station wagon and took it to the Arches, put in on the bar and
chewed Bachlor out. He was really surprised. As he said, the case was
over so he wasn’t trying to bribe me. I explained that it was just one of
those things that wasn’t done.
I don’t know the present owner, but I do know Gibby Hernandez, the
oldest maitre d’ in town. Between them they operate one of our finest
restaurants.
I just wish the walls of the Arches could talk. During the days when the
Lloyd Claire/Frank Rinehart political machine ran this town -- from 1928
until the mid-1950s -- all political deals were made in the Arches and
all pre-public council meetings were held there. On the other hand,
perhaps it’s just as well the walls can’t talk.
* JUDGE GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and former judge. His column
runs Tuesdays.
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